Guantanamo Bay: February 2009 Archives

Propelling prisoners' heads into concrete walls by means of towels wrapped around their necks, savage beatings with fists and rifles that left prisoners crippled, hanging prisoners by the arms with their arms strung up behind them, depriving prisoners of sleep for weeks on end, which has been thought the worst torture possible for 500 years, causing prisoners to freeze -- sometimes to death, and waterboarding are but a partial list of the torture methods ordered by America's highest officials. In the "Preliminary Memorandum of the Justice Robert H. Jackson Conference on Federal Prosecutions of War Criminals," law school Dean Lawrence Velvel, the founder of the Jackson Conference, details the full spectrum of tortures performed in wholesale combinations -- not one torture by itself -- on detainees around the world. His Preliminary Memorandum is a precursor to a formal legal complaint to be filed with the Justice Department this spring.

The Preliminary Memorandum identifies 31 culprits and details the war crimes they committed, the laws they broke, and the many fulsome warnings they received regarding their actions from numerous governmental lawyers and officials high and low, including the Judge Advocate Generals of all the armed services. The culprits who should be prosecuted include Bush, Cheney, Gonzales, Addington, Tenet, Bybee, Yoo, Haynes, Chertoff and others. Furthermore, the Preliminary Memorandum calls the Bush administration's illegal acts "an attempted constitutional revolution that succeeded for years." It began six days after 9/11, when Bush secretly gave the CIA permission to "murder . . . people all over the world." It continued in a series of secret, wholly specious legal memos authorizing torture, electronic eavesdropping, wholesale violations of law, and Presidential usurpation of the role of Congress.

Public pressure eventually forced the administration to declassify a few of the memos. These purported to authorize war crimes outlawed by the Geneva Conventions and U.S. anti-torture laws. Among them was John Yoo's infamous "torture memo" defining torture as "requiring the pain associated with organ failure or death," saying torture supposedly couldn't exist if the torturer wanted information, and urging that the President could do anything he wanted, including paying no attention whatever to Congressional laws. Meanwhile, Bush administration officials and lawyers ignored extensive warnings given them by government officials that they were engaging in criminal acts; the warnings were given both orally and in extensive memos.

By ANDREW O. SELSKY, Associated Press

A senior Navy officer based in Hawaii who once went to the same high school as President Barack Obama will be the next commander of the detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, the Pentagon said Friday.

Rear Adm. Thomas H. Copeman III has been assigned as the next commander of the Joint Task Force that runs the U.S. offshore prison camps, said Adm. Gary Roughead, the chief of Naval operations. Copeman is currently the deputy chief of staff for operations, training and readiness for the U.S. Pacific Fleet in Pearl Harbor.

The Pentagon did not say when Copeman takes over at Guantánamo, but he will preside over a historic period. In one of his first acts as president, Obama ordered the detention center closed within a year. About 245 suspected al Qaeda and Taliban members and others are currently locked up at the U.S. Navy base in southeast Cuba.

Obama and Copeman graduated from Punahou School in Hawaii two years apart. Copeman has said in previously published reports that he didn't know Obama among the roughly 1,600 students at its high school. The two have since met.

Copeman is the son and grandson of Navy veterans, like Obama's rival for the White House, Republican nominee John McCain.

The current commander of Joint Task Force-Guantánamo is Navy Rear Adm. David Thomas. Military press officials at the Pentagon, Pearl Harbor and Guantánamo said they did not know when the change of command would occur. Thomas started a two-year tour of duty last May, according to Navy Cmdr. Pauline Storum, director of public affairs for the joint task force.

The U.S. military intends to maintain the Guantánamo base, now commanded by Navy Capt. Steve Blaisdell, even after the detention center closes.

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Important Reading

Physicians for Human Rights
Broken Laws, Broken Lives

NLG White Paper
ON THE LAW OF TORTURE...

The President's Executioner

Detention and torture in Guantanamo



About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Guantanamo Bay category from February 2009.

Guantanamo Bay: January 2009 is the previous archive.

Guantanamo Bay: March 2009 is the next archive.

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